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Personality and the Planning Process
A Monograph
by
MAJ David A. Danikowski
Field Artillery
School of Advanced Military Studies
United States Army Command and General Staff College
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
First Term AY 00-01
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14. ABSTRACTMilitary planning is a logical, systematic process for conducting problem solving and decisionmaking. The planning process exists to support the commander in making decisions. As a partof the operations process (planning, preparation, execution and assessment driven by battlecommand) military planning uses standard procedures (doctrine) to provide courses of actionas solutions and to recommend decisions. Planning is continuous whether it is branch or sequelplanning, refinement of an existing plan, or planning for the next operation. The Army processis the Military Decision Making Process (MDMP), which is conducted by people withindividual personalities. Personality affects how people think and behave. Individualpersonality type impels behavior (public and private), drives attitude, and compels cognitivefunctions. Leadership is a function of command and control and battle command drives theoperations process. The extent to which leaders master the domains of the Army leadershipframework accounts for some of the consistency among professionals. Fundamentalpersonality types account for some of the differences. These differences affect friendly forcesand enemy forces alike. Understanding differences as a function of personality type canfacilitate increased competence for commanders and individual staff officers. This paper isbased on theories of personality type (C.G. Jung?s psychological types, Katherine Briggs andIsabel Briggs Myers work on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), and David Keirsey?sFour Temperaments) which propose explanations of the phenomena that make up individualpersonalities. Analysis of historical vignettes (Korea, 1951 and Operation Market-Garden,1944) illustrates differences in perception and judging functions which effect individualcognition and behavior. The analysis is from the perspective of four hypothetical plannersrepresenting the Keirsey temperaments of personality using the MDMP applied to thehistorical problems in the vignettes. The potential differences can be profound as the ?NT?conceptualizes the vision and systems to learn what might happen, the ?SP? generatesalternatives yet prefers to take life as it comes, the ?SJ? trusts concrete procedures and keepsall things scheduled and in their place, and the ?NF? demonstrates empathy for thoseconducting the process and those affected by it. Leaders, and particularly commanders andchiefs of staff, should incorporate their understanding of individual personality type into theentire operations process--particularly planning. They can capitalize on individual strengths,develop weaknesses, and mitigate misunderstanding among the unaware.
15. SUBJECT TERMSMilitary planning; Military Decision Making Process (MDMP); Myers-Briggs Type Indicator(MBTI); Korean War; Operation Market-Garden; Keirsey?s Four Temperaments
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Abstract
PERSONALITY AND THE PLANNING PROCESS by MAJ David A. Danikowski,USA, 47 pages.
Military planning is a logical, systematic process for conducting problem solving anddecision making. The planning process exists to support the commander in making decisions. Asa part of the operations process (planning, preparation, execution and assessment driven by battlecommand) military planning uses standard procedures (doctrine) to provide courses of action assolutions and to recommend decisions. Planning is continuous whether it is branch or sequelplanning, refinement of an existing plan, or planning for the next operation. The Army process isthe Military Decision Making Process (MDMP), which is conducted by people with individualpersonalities.
Personality affects how people think and behave. Individual personality type impelsbehavior (public and private), drives attitude, and compels cognitive functions. Leadership is afunction of command and control and battle command drives the operations process. The extentto which leaders master the domains of the Army leadership framework accounts for some of theconsistency among professionals. Fundamental personality types account for some of thedifferences. These differences affect friendly forces and enemy forces alike. Understandingdifferences as a function of personality type can facilitate increased competence for commandersand individual staff officers.
This paper is based on theories of personality type (C.G. Jung’s psychological types,Katherine Briggs and Isabel Briggs Myers work on the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), andDavid Keirsey’s Four Temperaments) which propose explanations of the phenomena that makeup individual personalities. Analysis of historical vignettes (Korea, 1951 and Operation Market-Garden, 1944) illustrates differences in perception and judging functions which effect individualcognition and behavior. The analysis is from the perspective of four hypothetical plannersrepresenting the Keirsey temperaments of personality using the MDMP applied to the historicalproblems in the vignettes.
The potential differences can be profound as the “NT” conceptualizes the vision andsystems to learn what might happen, the “SP” generates alternatives yet prefers to take life as itcomes, the “SJ” trusts concrete procedures and keeps all things scheduled and in their place, andthe “NF” demonstrates empathy for those conducting the process and those affected by it.Leaders, and particularly commanders and chiefs of staff, should incorporate their understandingof individual personality type into the entire operations process--particularly planning. They cancapitalize on individual strengths, develop weaknesses, and mitigate misunderstanding among theunaware.
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS .............................................................................................................................................1
INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................................................................4
Planning........................................................................................................................................................................ 7Personality Type ......................................................................................................................................................... 8
THEORETICAL FOUNDATION..........................................................................................................................10
Theory of Personality Type..................................................................................................................................... 11Figure 1. Type Table ............................................................................................................................................... 15Theory of Planning ................................................................................................................................................... 16
Problem Solving and Decision Making............................................................................................................ 18
METHODOLOGY.......................................................................................................................................................20
Personality and the Planning Process.................................................................................................................... 22The United Nations counteroffensive on the Korean peninsula (1951)........................................................... 23The Drive to the Rhine at Arnhem of Operation Market-Garden (1944)........................................................ 27
ANALYSIS ....................................................................................................................................................................30
Figure 2. The Military Decision Making Process (MDMP)............................................................................. 32The United Nations counteroffensive on the Korean peninsula (1951)........................................................... 33
From the “SJ” Temperament Perspective........................................................................................................ 33From the “NF” Temperament Perspective....................................................................................................... 35
The Drive to the Rhine at Arnhem of Operation Market-Garden (1944)........................................................ 36From the “SP” Temperament Perspective ....................................................................................................... 36From the “NT” Temperament Perspective ...................................................................................................... 37
CONCLUSIONS ..........................................................................................................................................................39
APPENDIX -- THE KEIRSEY TEMPERAMENTS .........................................................................................44
The “SJ” Temperament - The Guardians.............................................................................................................. 44The “NF” Temperament - The Idealists ............................................................................................................... 44The “SP” Temperament - The Artisans................................................................................................................ 45The “NT” Temperament - The Rationals ............................................................................................................. 46
BIBLIOGRAPHY........................................................................................................................................................47
4
INTRODUCTION
The army is a complex organization consisting of various systems and resources. Since
people are the most important resource and since all combat involves soldiers, no amount of
technology can reduce the importance of the human dimension. With a common goal of mission
accomplishment, commanders and staffs initiate and integrate all military functions and
operations. Military operations have both a functional component and a personal component.
Operational art is “the employment of military forces to attain strategic goals through the design,
organization, integration, and execution of battles and engagements into campaigns and major
operations.”1 The functional component of operations is represented by the linkage of tactics to
strategy (means to ends) through a series of tactical events. The personal component of
operations is revealed in the mind and personality of the force commander, as well as his senior
staff officers and subordinate commanders.2
Commanders and their staffs, organized to undertake and complete military activities,
must exercise command and control based on human characteristics as well as on equipment and
procedures. The application of operational art determines when, where, and for what purpose
major forces will be employed to influence the enemy disposition before combat.3 The heart of
operational art is the commander and the battle staff. The knowledge, experience, and personality
of commanders define how they interact with their units. In the words of Field Marshal William
Slim, “Command is an extension of personality.”4
1 Department of the Army Headquarters, Field Manual (FM) 100-5. Operations (WashingtonD.C.: Government Printing Office, 1993). Glossary-6.2 Department of the Army Headquarters, Field Manual (FM) 3-0. Operations (DRAG Edition)(Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 2000). 2-3.3 Ibid. 2-3.4 William Slim, Higher Command in War (Quantico, Virginia: US Marine Corps Command andStaff College), Lecture.
5
One’s personality is “the totality of qualities and traits, as of character or behavior, that
are peculiar to an individual person.”5 This definition serves only to reinforce that people
(commanders and individual staff members) are unique. What is critical for this research is not
only that people are singular entities but how they are so. There is an oversimplified tendency to
attribute some behavior to a nebulous, ill-defined category of personality. One’s personality
plays a part in shaping behavior and cognition and it affects the systems, resources, and processes
that require human interaction. In order to demonstrate the part that personality plays, it is
necessary to illuminate the role of personality in organizations.
Investment in people (human capital) is the key to organizational success. The six Army
imperatives: Doctrine, Training, Leader Development, Organization, Materiel, and Soldier
Systems (DTLOMS) impact the concepts for force design. The army as an organization is subject
to the influences of doctrine (and dogma), the effectiveness of training and leadership (and leader
development), the structure of a hierarchical organization, and the integration of technology.
However, the dynamics of group behavior and personality can have profound (though perhaps
subtle) impact on the commander, the staff, and the organization. The impact of human
interaction can be realized by analyzing the attributes, skills, and actions of people in
organizations. Organizational processes consist of the connections between and among people,
systems, and procedures. Communication is the key to establishing and clarifying these
connections. The goal of this research is to increase communication and understanding among
the battle staff and commander.
The perennial argument of whether leaders are born or made has not been put to rest. In
the introduction to The Challenge of Military Leadership, Lieutenant General (retired) Walter F.
Ulmer Jr. states, “Our assumption is that behaviors can be taught and nourished. Whether those
5 The American Heritage Dictionary, Second ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1982).926.
6
basic attitudes underlying leaders’ behavior can be greatly modified remains of major import to
our leader identification and selection systems.”6 The characteristics of leadership can be taught
over time, and the best teacher is experience. However, those basic attitudes underlying leader’s
behavior are a function of personality.
Both friendly and enemy forces seek to maintain the cohesion of their force in the
physical domain, maintain the organization of their force in the cybernetic domain, and preserve
the integration of their force in the moral domain.7 These multiple domains illustrate that military
operations cannot satisfactorily be reduced to Lanchesterian equations or numerical correlation of
forces.8 These same domains complicate the design of simulations and wargames. Scientific
experimentation ideally isolates a single independent variable and generates consistent results
from identical procedures. But isolating any variable in the complexity of warfare is precarious
and generating consistent results (even from identical procedures) is improbable.
“The art of war deals with living and with moral forces.”9 Here, Clausewitz wrote about
rudimentary psychology before it was a mature field. A most important aspect inferred from his
writing is that there exists a personality component on both sides of a conflict because “war is not
the action of a living force upon a lifeless mass . . . but always the collision of two living
forces.”10 Commanders use moral forces (in combination with physical and cybernetic forces) to
impose their will upon the enemy. “Consult the tactical series of field manual at any level. There
you will find commanders described as planners, synchronizers, tacticians, and data processors--
6 Lloyd J. Matthews and Dale E. Brown, eds. The Challenge of Military Leadership (McClean,Virginia: Pergamon-Brassey's, 1989). ix.7 James J. Schneider, "Theoretical Paper No. 3: The Theory of Operational Art,", (FortLeavenworth, Kansas: U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, 1988). 5.8 For further explanation of Lanchester’s equation see James J. Schneider, "Theoretical Paper No.4: Vulcan's Anvil: The American Civil War and the Emergence of Operational Art,", (FortLeavenworth, Kansas: School of Advanced Military Studies, 1991). 2-4.9 Carl von Clausewitz, On War, trans. Michael Howard and Peter Paret (Princeton: PrincetonUniversity Press, 1976). 86.10 Ibid. 77.
7
anything, in fact, but leaders who depend on flesh-and-blood soldiers to win their battles.”11 It is
the origin of differences in living forces--leaders--that lies at the heart of this paper.
Planning
Full spectrum operations follow a process of planning, preparing, and executing while
continually assessing outputs and the need for input.12 This paper focuses on planning, with the
understanding that planning is part of the operations process, which is cyclical and overlapping.
Planning is continuous whether it is branch or sequel planning, refinement of an existing plan, or
planning for the next operation. The word planning comes from the Latin planum, meaning flat
surface. The word “entered the English language in the Seventeenth Century, referring
principally to forms, such as maps or blueprints, that were drawn on flat surfaces. Thus the word
has long been associated with formalized documents.”13 The plan becomes a common point of
reference for operations. The staff assists the commander with the detailed analysis and
coordination necessary to convert planning guidance and the commander’s intent into the
formalized document--the plan.14
An operational definition of planning must include some observable phenomena in
organizations. Planning consists in formalized procedures specifically regarding an integrated
system of decisions through decomposition, articulation, and rationalization. 15 Military planning
is a formal, systematic process of dissecting a problem into its component parts and constructing
courses of action as solutions in order to frame decisions and execute a strategy. The process
11 Steven J. Eden, "Leadership on Future Fields: Remembering the Human Factors in War,"Military Review 79, no. 3 (1999). 38.12 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 6-1.13 Henry Mintzberg, The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning (New York: Simon & Schuster,1994). 14.14 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 6-1.15 Mintzberg, The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning. 14-15.
8
ideally requires generating varied options, conducting detailed analysis, and making specific,
rational recommendations to the commander on how to proceed. “Plans specify what
commanders will decide personally.”16
The Military Decision Making Process (MDMP) was formalized with the publishing of
FM 101-5, Staff Organization and Operations, which established a logical, systematic, step-by-
step process for conducting planning and recommending decisions. “The MDMP is an adaptation
of the Army’s analytical approach to problem solving.”17 In the joint arena, planning is codified
in Joint Publication 5-0, Doctrine for Planning Joint Operations, which likewise delineates
planning into a logical construct. The MDMP and joint planning processes have proven valuable
and they are familiar to all military leaders.
“The MDMP is a single, established, and proven analytical process.”18 The commander
and the staff develop estimates and a plan through the MDMP. The estimates and the plan are
situational. The estimates of the situation and the orders resulting from the planning process
conform to the contemporary situation and seek to influence that situation. The context of each
situation is dynamic and complex; therefore, the planning process is subject to the dichotomy of
effectiveness versus efficiency. This separation is one that can be explained by an investigation
of individual personality type.
Personality Type
Individual personality type impels behavior (public and private), drives attitude, and
compels cognitive functions.19 Many have recognized that there are those individuals who excel
16 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 6-1.17 Department of the Army Headquarters, Field Manual (FM) 101-5. Staff Organization andOperations (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1997). 5-1.18 Ibid. 5-1.19 C.G. Jung, “Psychological Types,” in The Basic Writings of C.G. Jung, ed. Violet de Laszlo(New York: Random House, 1923). 185-189.
9
at generating ideas and inspiring the big picture but have an aversion for details. Other
individuals excel at in-depth analysis but have a hostility for pie-in-the-sky ideas which are not
apparently based on the details at hand. The differences in these simplistic examples demonstrate
differences in individual cognitive functions, but the value of this research is not in the mere
recognition of differences. The appreciation of differences is only the beginning.
As this research demonstrates the predictability of classifiable human behavior, it
facilitates an appreciation that human behavior is not random. Appreciation leads to knowledge
and applied knowledge becomes understanding. 20 Understanding differences as a function of
personality type can facilitate increased competence for commanders and individual staff officers.
Mission accomplishment is all important, but considering the domains of military operations
(physical, cybernetic, and moral) understanding personality type can increase effectiveness and
efficiency.
Commanders and staff planners on battle staffs each have individual personalities, which
equip them with distinctive and sharply contrasting ways of perceiving the world around them
and judging the information they perceive. These cognitive functions (perceiving and judging)
are the first evidence of the influence of personality type. Personality type also influences the
energy sources that drive planners, as well as the cognitive functions in which they operate
routinely. Planners conduct the planning process to serve their commanders, and the differences
in individual personalities must effect the manner in which commanders and staffs operate within
the organization.
Development of compensating behaviors and assignment of tasks based on personality
type could change the way that military planners execute planning. The planning process is
unlikely to change radically, and individual personality types do not change. There are planning
20 Schneider, "Theoretical Paper No. 3: The Theory of Operational Art,". 2.
10
functions which are best suited for particular personality types and leaders can take advantage of
this fact. Individuals can also recognize that their mental processes are unevenly developed (not a
function of intelligence, but merely personality type) and can consciously work to develop
compensating behaviors in tasks requiring the use of their neglected, less-developed processes.
The army organization consists of people, and personality affects how people think and
behave. The operations process includes planning which is conducted by people with individual
personalities. These differences affect friendly forces and enemy forces alike. This introductory
material leads to the primary research question. Do planners with differing personality types--
different ways of perceiving (sensing and intuition) and judging (thinking and feeling)--conduct
the planning process differently?
THEORETICAL FOUNDATION
To provide a framework for discussion of the phenomena of personality and planning, it
is necessary to establish and validate accepted theories. Theory is “the body of systematically
organized knowledge devised to analyze, predict, or otherwise explain the nature or behavior of
specific phenomena.”21 True theory should stand the test of time while doctrine is commonly
established by precedent, within a particular paradigm or construct, which accommodates the
environment in which one operates. Theory and doctrine have common goals: (1) utilitarian--to
improve performance or operations, (2) pedagogic--to instruct, and (3) cognitive--to facilitate and
frame thought.22 The relevant theories of personality and planning will be addressed in kind.
21 The American Heritage Dictionary, Second ed. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1982).1260.22 Clausewitz, On War. 14.
11
Theory of Personality Type
Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) dedicated more than sixty years of his life to psychiatric
experimental research and clinical investigations in his native Zurich, Switzerland to lay the
groundwork for a psychology of the spirit.23 He investigated the spontaneous activities that
originate in regions of the psyche known as the unconscious. Before establishing Jung’s theory
of personality types, it is fair to note that in 1912 Sigmund Freud (a colleague of Jung’s) found
unacceptable Jung’s differing concept of the libido and the concept of an independent collective
unconscious (far beyond the personal unconscious of Freudian dreams and instinctual lust).24
In order to understand the body and intent of Jung’s work, a brief description of some of
his writing is in order. Jung declared that there are two kinds of thinking: (1) the directed
thinking in logical sequences (which is commonly understood thinking) and (2) the “spontaneous,
imaginative, largely non-verbal and non-logical processes which are the raw material of all
creative activity.”25 Jung also spoke of typical distinctions of attitude, which are marked by the
direction of individual interest (or libido movement). The interest of the extraverted (expressive)
person flows outward towards surrounding objects, people, and abstractions. The outside world
engages and holds his interest. The introverted (reserved) person directs his interest towards his
inner life and internal reactions (responses to stimuli in the environment or spontaneously arising
thoughts, images, and feelings from the unconscious).26 Finally, Jung designated four basic
psychological functions. The rational functions are thinking (tough-minded) and feeling
(friendly) and they are the directed functions which make decisions or judge raw information.
23 Spirit: “The animating or vital principle in man, the immaterial intelligent or sentient part of aperson.” (Definition from the Oxford English Dictionary)24 Violet de Laszlo, ed. The Collected Works of C.G. Jung (New York: Random House, 1959).viii-xi.25 C.G. Jung, “Symbols of Transformation,” in The Basic Writings of C.G. Jung, ed. Violet deLaszlo (New York: Random House, 1956). 16-18.26 Jung, “Psychological Types,” 184-187.
12
The irrational functions (irrational does not denote something outside of the province of reason
but that which is not established by reason)27 are sensation (observant) and intuition
(introspective) which are concerned with the incidental perceptions of occurrences and
information. 28
These attitudes and functions spring from the inborn collective unconscious. Jung called
these inner disposition or propensities archetypes, which comes from the Greek meaning the
“prime imprinter”--for example in manuscripts, it denotes the original, the basic form for later
copies.29 The archetypes function whenever there are no conscious ideas present, or when those
that are present are impossible. Typical patterns (of behavior and cognition) are accessible to
consciousness, but the archetypes function as unconscious propensities that “select” contents of
extraneous origin, assimilate, and integrate them. The selected contents are presumed by the
individual to be determined by the object when the real source is the subjective influence of the
psyche.30 This carries on the thoughts of Plato, who said that, “the idea, a kind of a spiritual
model, is pre-existent and supraordinate to the appearance or phenomenon.”31
By way of analogy, the thresholds of consciousness are compared to sense functions of
sight and sound. There are thresholds for human eyes and ears based on physiology.
Wavelengths of light from 7700 to 3900 angstroms are visible to the human eye. Sound
frequencies from 20 to 20,000 vibrations per second are perceptible to the human ear.32
Wavelengths and frequencies outside these thresholds exist but are imperceptible to human
senses. Similar thresholds exist in the psyche. The range established by archetypal attitudes and
27 Ibid., 264.28 Ibid., 187, 223-234.29 Aniela Jaffé, The Myth of Meaning, trans. R. F. C. Hull (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons,1971). 15.30 Jung, “Psychological Types,” 220.31 Jaffé, The Myth of Meaning. 16.32 C.G. Jung, “On the Nature of the Psyche,” in The Basic Writings of C.G. Jung, ed. Violet S. deLaszlo (New York: Random House, 1954). 46.
13
functions governs conscious perception. “The collective unconscious is not accessible to direct
observation. But it can be investigated by an indirect and roundabout way, through the
observation of conscious and therefore comprehensible contents that permits inferences to be
drawn as to its nature and its structure.”33
Preferences indicate attraction or aversion to people, tasks, and events. For example,
individuals either prefer extraversion or introversion (expressive or reserved). Everyone has a
capacity for both and “there can never occur a pure type in the sense that he is entirely possessed
of the one mechanism with a complete atrophy of the other.”34 A typical attitude always signifies
merely the relative predominance (preference) of one mechanism. The relative weight of
predominance of an attitude (or function) is the subject of personality type measurement
indicators.
Preference also applies to the functions. Individuals either prefer sensing (observant)
perception or intuitive (introspective) perception. Likewise, one prefers either thinking (tough-
minded) judgment or feeling (friendly) judgment. All four functions can become conscious and
manifest in behavior. Individuals have a primary (dominant) function and an auxiliary function.
The primary function will indicate a life style orientation in which one prefers to operate
publicly--in one of the perceiving functions or one of the judging functions. The significance of
the auxiliary function is that it is “always one whose nature is different from, though not
antagonistic to, the leading function.”35 For example, sensing (observant) as primary function can
readily pair with thinking (tough-minded) as auxiliary or equally well with feeling (friendly), but
never with intuition (introspective). Intuition is antagonistic to sensing because they are both
perceiving functions.
33 Jaffé, The Myth of Meaning. 16.34 Jung, “Psychological Types,” 187.35 Ibid., 239.
14
The strength and influence of preference is illustrated by the analogy of handedness. A
right-handed individual demonstrates a preference for using the right hand. As a result, that hand
gets stronger, more nimble, and develops greater dexterity. It does not indicate an inability to use
the left hand. The left hand is just less developed--first because it is the non-preference and as a
result it is less used and therefore less mature. The preference-influenced behavior is most
evident in times of stress. A right-handed person uses both hands differently in varied situations,
but the more developed hand will be the one on which they rely to break a fall or catch a ball.
This does not deny ambidexterity (the ability to use both hands equally); however, because they
have no clear preference there is wasted time in unconsciously deciding which hand to use in
times of stress.36
It can be difficult to understand all the possibilities of preferences for attitudes, functions,
and orientations. The combinations of preferences for attitude (extraversion or introversion),
function (sensing or intuition and thinking or feeling), and orientation (perceiving or judging)
each have implications for public attitude, cognition, and behavior. Knowing just a subset of the
combinations (for example introverted thinking or sensing judging) can provide some accurate
information for making predictions about behavior. This is the premise from which David
Keirsey explored the Four Temperaments.37
Before addressing the Keirsey Temperaments is will be helpful to explore the work done
to popularize and mainstream Jung’s cumbersome theory of psychological types. Jung wrote for
“a largely specialized audience of psychologists . . . and even the English translation of his work
makes heavy reading.”38 In 1942, prompted by World War II--and the conviction that the war
36 Otto Kroeger and Janet M. Thuesen, Type Talk: The 16 Personality Types That Determine HowWe Live, Love, and Work (New York: Dell Publishing, 1988). 14-15.37 David Keirsey and Marilyn Bates, Please Understand Me: Character & Temperament Types(Del Mar, CA: Prometheus Nemesis Book Company, 1984). 4.38 Isabel Briggs Myers and Peter B. Myers, Gifts Differing : Understanding Personality Type(Palo Alto, Calif.: Davies-Black Pub., 1995). xii.
15
was caused, in part, by people not understanding differences--Katherine Cook Briggs and her
daughter, Isabel Briggs Myers, who had no formal psychological training, began to develop a
series of questions to measure personality differences. The result was the Myers-Briggs Type
Indicator (MBTI).39 The two women made extensions of Jung’s theory with practical, daily
applications (beyond the fields of psychology and anthropology) with particular consideration of
the auxiliary processes in relation to the primary, dominant preference. The type table (figure 1)
enables one to visualize the relationships of the sixteen resulting types.
ISTJ ISFJ INFJ INTJ
ISTP ISFP INFP INTP
ESTP ESFP ENFP ENTP
ESTJ ESFJ ENFJ ENTJEX
TR
AV
ER
TS
INTR
OV
ERTS
-(I)
SENSING TYPES INTUITIVE TYPES-(N)
With Thinking With ThinkingWith Feeling With Feeling
Judg
ing
Jud
ging
Perc
eptiv
ePe
rcep
tive
Figure 1. Type Table40
39 Kroeger and Thuesen, Type Talk . 281-283.40 Myers and Myers, Gifts Differing : Understanding Personality Type. 212-213.
16
Sixteen types would be an unwieldy number to keep in mind if the types were arbitrary or
unrelated categories. But they are closely related, particularly to other types that share some
preferences.41 David Keirsey “found it convenient and useful to partition Myers’ sixteen types
into four groups.”42 These groupings are based on how many ways these groups are alike. The
groups are (1) the SPs, (2) the SJs, (3) the NFs, and (4) the NTs (see appendix). As was stated
before, any groupings provide insights to behavior, but the temperaments in particular contrast so
sharply as to provide predictable attitudes and actions.
Theory of Planning
Military planning is a component of problem solving and decision making. Joint and
Army publications describe the joint operations planning process and the MDMP in detail, but
this section will focus on the theory of planning with particular attention given to problem solving
and creative thinking. The planning process exists to support the commander in making decisions.
The relationship of the commander to the staff is a function of personality, but theory is not
situational (as doctrinal procedures may be) and seeks these same goals: (1) utilitarian--to
improve performance or operations, (2) pedagogic--to instruct, and (3) cognitive--to facilitate and
frame thought.43
Planning is “the means by which the commander envisions a desired outcome, lays out
effective ways of achieving it, and communicates to his subordinates his battlefield visualization,
intent, and decisions, focusing on the results he expects to achieve.”44 As a part of the operations
process (planning, preparation, execution and assessment driven by battle command) planning
41 Ibid. 21.42 David Keirsey, Please Understand Me II: Temperament, Character, Intelligence (Del Mar, Ca:Prometheus Nemesis Book Company, 1998). 18.43 Clausewitz, On War. 14.44 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 6-1.
17
allows the commander and staff to translate the commander’s visualization into a specific course
of action for preparation and execution. “The commander’s visualization is the process of
developing a clear understanding of the current state with relation to the enemy and environment,
envisioning a desired end state which represents mission accomplishment, and then subsequently
visualizing the sequence of activity that moves the force from its current state to the end state.”45
Because the operations process is cyclical and overlapping, planning is continuous and
not confined to a single step in the process. During preparation (those activities to improve the
ability to conduct operations including plan refinement, rehearsals, reconnaissance, coordination,
inspections, and movement) planners continue their work with and for the commander. Even in
execution (putting a plan into action by applying combat power to accomplish the mission and
using situational understanding to assess progress and make execution and adjustment decisions)
planning continues to support decisions. Execution decisions are selecting what needs to be done
next according to the plan (if the progress of the operation is meeting expectations), and
adjustment decisions are selecting what must be done to exploit opportunity or restore mission
accomplishment.46
Planning consists in formalized procedures specifically regarding an integrated system of
decisions through decomposition, articulation, and rationalization. 47 The formalized procedures
include the actions taken (step-by-step or continuously) and the output--the plan. The integrated
system of decisions identifies if a decision needs to be made, by whom, then when and what to
decide. The decomposition is identifying the problem (or problem set) and breaking it down into
component parts for analysis. This can be done systematically or intuitively based upon relative
complexity, experience, and time available. The articulation is the development of a concept--a
45 Combined Arms Doctrine Directorate Headquarters, Student Text (ST) 6-0. Command andControl (Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Command and General Staff College, 2000). Glossary-2.46 Ibid. 2-11.47 Mintzberg, The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning. 14.
18
representation or a model--of the problem. This is critical since planning can only attempt to
solve a problem as it is conceived. If the conception and articulation are wrong then planners
may not solve the problem as it exists. Finally, rationalization ensures objective, factual, logical,
and realistic solutions with internal consistency.48
Problem Solving and Decision Making
Russell Ackoff defines a problem as having five types of components. (1) The decision
maker(s) who must face the problem; (2) the controllable variables--under the control of the
decision make;, (3) the uncontrolled variables--outside the control of the decision maker, but
which can affect the outcome of the decision; (4) constraints imposed from within or without on
the possible values of the controllable and uncontrolled variables; and (5) the possible outcomes
produced jointly by the decision and the uncontrolled variables.49
Gary Klein addresses several traditional models of problem solving. 50 Stage models
represent the traditional models of linear problem solving. These structured and sequential
models vary in the number of stages, but they all: (1) define the problem, (2) generate a course of
action, (3) evaluate the course of action, and (4) carry out the course of action. 51 These models
focus on the output at the expense of valuable input. Specifically, in order to define the problem
it is necessary to have well-defined goals. Well-defined goals usually only exist in laboratory
settings whereas natural goals seem to be ill defined.
The artificial intelligence approach tries to use computers to perform complex judgment
and reasoning tasks. The difficulty being that this is not how people make decisions. Computers
48 Russell L. Ackoff, The Art of Problem Solving (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1978). 13 andMintzberg, The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning. 13.49 Ackoff, The Art of Problem Solving. 11-12.50 Gary Klein, Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press,1999). 121-146.51 Ibid. 121-126
19
set up a problem space and perform searches to refine a set of objects, relations, and properties.
“The primary mechanism of artificial intelligence is just to spread out the alternatives
exhaustively and filter through them efficiently. This is the same strategy used in analytical
approaches to decision making.”52 The perceptual approach to problem solving (Gestalt
psychology) uses perceptions in thought rather than treating thought as calculating ways
to manipulate symbols. This approach uses skills such as pattern recognition.
Pattern recognition describes how people think. The Recognition-Primed Decision
(RPD) model is not a stage model but a descriptive model of the natural decision making process
as it occurs. The problem with Gary Klein’s research methodology is that the “thinking out loud
research process does not represent active imagination which reveals the deeper layers of the
unconscious, but only wishful thinking which is a product of the unconscious arranged by the
ego.”53 Experience is the means through which one establishes patterns (pictures, sequences,
leverage points, systems, stories, et cetera). Vicarious experience still counts and metaphors,
analogies, and mental simulation solidify the patterns in the mind. 54
Metaphor and analogy depict patterns. Pattern recognition and mental simulation can use
metaphor and analogy to continue “the story” to its likely conclusion. Military analogy can be
found throughout the body of military history. Linkages may be dubious (or even faulty) but the
“well read” problem solver can construct patterns (or build on existing patterns) from vast
experience (including vicarious experience). One need not be aware that they are using the RPD
method and subconscious to conscious (or logical) problem solving need not be linear by
following a series of steps.
52 Ibid. 133.53 Jaffé, The Myth of Meaning. 98,54 Klein, Sources of Power. 17 and 30.
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Theory provides a proposed explanation of a particular phenomenon. Jung’s writing on
psychological type was refined by Isabel Briggs Myers to classify people into sixteen personality
types. These types are based on attitudes, functions, and orientations for public behavior. These
types manifest in differences in cognition and behavior. David Keirsey simplified personality
classification through use of the four temperaments. Planning is the body of procedures for
problem solving and decision making in which a problem is decomposed, rationally analyzed,
and a solution is articulated. Military planning uses standard procedures (doctrine) to provide
recommended decisions. The Army process is the Military Decision Making Process (MDMP).
Leaders at all levels in the Army must understand the processes and apply the doctrine.
Leadership is a function of command and control and battle command drives the operations
process of planning, preparing, executing and assessing. In order to investigate the relationship
of personality to the planning process, it is necessary to articulate a coherent methodology for
investigation and illustration.
METHODOLOGY
Extraordinary leaders distinguish themselves in tough situations by their character,
competence, and determination to achieve excellence. Their experience and professional
judgment allow them to make sound decisions under great stress, and the force of their character
imbues their subordinates with confidence. They possess an unyielding desire to attain victory
and the insight and ability to achieve it. They are also individuals with unique personalities. The
Army’s leadership framework holistically portrays four dimensions of what leaders must BE,
KNOW, and DO.
At the foundation of Army leadership are the Army values: Loyalty, Duty, Respect,
Selfless Service, Honor, Integrity and Personal Courage (LDRSHIP). A leader must also BE in
possession of certain mental, physical, and emotional attributes. The mental attributes of an Army
21
leader include will, self-discipline, initiative, judgment, self-confidence, intelligence, and cultural
awareness. The physical attributes are health, physical fitness, and professional bearing and the
emotional attributes are self-control, balance, and stability. 55 These values and attributes form
one’s character, and this research builds on character by recognizing the existence and influence
of personality type on attitude, cognition, and behavior.
The skills that a leader must KNOW consist in four categories. (1) Interpersonal skills
are critical in a soldier-oriented organization like the Army and nowhere is the potential power of
personality type so relevant. “Leadership is influencing people --by providing purpose, direction,
and motivation--while operating to accomplish the mission and improving the organization.”56
Influencing people requires interpersonal skills that include coaching, teaching, counseling,
motivating, and empowering. (2) Conceptual skills, Jung would argue, exist both in one’s
consciousness and in the archetypes which form personality type in the collective unconscious.
“Conceptual skills enable one to handle ideas. They require sound judgment as well as the ability
to think creatively and reason analytically, critically, and ethically.”57 (3) Technical skills are
job-related abilities and basic soldier skills necessary to complete assigned tasks and functions
and (4) tactical skills complete the dimension of skills a leader must KNOW.58
Actions that a leader must DO are the final dimension of the Army leadership framework.
The actions consist of influencing, operating, and improving actions. Influencing actions include
communicating, decision making, and motivating. These relate to the interpersonal and
conceptual skills of the leader, which were already associated with personality. The operating
actions are consistent with the operations process already described--planning, preparation,
55 Department of the Army Headquarters, Field Manual (FM) 22-100. Army Leadership(Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1999). 1-3, 2-11 to 2-17.56 Ibid. 1-4.57 Ibid. 2-25.58 Ibid. 1-7
22
executing, and assessing. Finally, improving actions are developing (mentoring), building
(teamwork), and learning (seeking self-improvement and organizational growth).59 The Army
leadership framework defines what Army leaders must BE, KNOW, and DO. The values,
attributes, skills, and actions depict standards and goals for which all leaders strive. The extent to
which leaders master the domains of the leadership framework accounts for some of the
consistency among professionals. Fundamental personality types account for some of the
differences.
Personality and the Planning Process
So far it has been established that human behavior is not random but predictable and
therefore classifiable. Operations planning and the MDMP are analytical processes used in the
military approach to problem solving and decision making. Research provides insight into the
relationship between personality and planning. There are causal linkages, to be sure, between
individual personality type and techniques of problem solving and decision making. Without the
use of a measurement indicator to determine personality type, this researcher’s attempt to label or
“type” a historical figure for illustration would lack credibility. Likewise the data is not available
for the collection of staff officers and subordinates who would have advised the commander in
his decisions.
Historical vignettes from actual operations will establish a medium for illustration and
analysis. These are not intended to be exhaustive case studies, only a backdrop upon which to lay
personality and the planning process. Also of note, the modern doctrinal procedures for formal
planning (the Army’s MDMP and the modern Joint Operation Planning and Execution System
(JOPES) planning processes) were not in use at the time of the illustrative vignettes. Analysis
will focus on proposed explanations (or theory). The benefit of such analysis is that application
59 Ibid. 1-8.
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and doctrine are situational. To demonstrate relevance to today, one need only apply the
proposed explanations to the contemporary environment.
The historical vignettes used for illustration will be (1) the United Nations
counteroffensive in Korea 1951, and (2) the Anglo-American drive to the Rhine at Arnhem in
1944. Each vignette will identify the decision maker, the controllable variables, the uncontrolled
variables which can affect the outcome of the decision, the constraints and values of the variables,
and the possible outcomes produced jointly by the decision and the uncontrolled variables. This
will serve to frame the historical, operational problems. The model for analysis will be to utilize
the MDMP from the perspective of four different planners, each with a unique personality type
represented by the four Keirsey temperaments.
The United Nations counteroffensive on the Korean peninsula (1951)
General Matthew B. Ridgway was perhaps one of the most extraordinary American
commanders of the twentieth century. He was the World War II commander of the 82nd
Airborne Division and XVIII Airborne Corps, the Korean War commander who restored the
fighting shape of Eighth Army after its long retreat from the Yalu River and he later replaced
General of the Army Douglas MacArthur as United Nations Commander in Chief in Far East
Command. He went on to serve as Supreme Allied Commander Europe and finally as Chief of
Staff of the Army.60
Eighth Army had been through much in the six months since Task Force Smith arrived
near Osan, Korea on July 5, 1950. The United Nations (UN) forces had conducted a delay, an
unorganized withdrawal, and desperate defense along the Pusan perimeter. They resumed the
offensive in September with the amphibious assault at Inchon and the breakout from Pusan. After
60 Mathew B. Ridgway and Harold H. Martin, Soldier OP (Westport, Connecticut: GreenwoodPublishing Group, 1974). 1-4.
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recapturing Seoul, UN forces continued into North Korea to eliminate the Inmun Gun (the North
Korean People’s Army). Intelligence estimates indicated that neither China nor Russia would
intervene, and if they did, only 60,000 Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) would be able to get
across the Yalu River and interfere. Unknown, was that in June the CCF had begun movement of
the CCF Fourth Field Army under Lin Piao (some 600,000 troops) into Manchuria, along the
North Korean border, and by September nearly 300,000 Chinese were already in North Korea.61
Whatever its skill or courage, it cannot be argued that the U.S. Army suffered from
deficiencies in discipline and training. It was not until several months into the Korean War that
new trainees underwent half their training in the field and a third of it by night. From October 26
to December 15, a series of CCF counteroffensives had compelled the UN forces into retreat from
the Yalu River all the way back to the 38th Parallel. The U.N force of 140,000 Americans,
20,000 British, Turks, other Allies and 100,000 South Korean soldiers were on the edge of
disaster.62
General Ridgway demonstrated his character when he assumed command of Eighth
Army in Korea on December 26, 1950, following the death of General Walton Walker in a jeep
accident. (The decision to replace Walker had occurred before his death, but there was an
understandable reluctance to publicly trample on the dead man’s grave). A defeatist attitude had
infected many of the troops and leaders of Eighth Army. Arriving in these depressing
circumstances, Ridgway directed his staff to prepare for counterattack. “There will be no more
discussion of retreat. We’re going back!”63 He went forward to get the feel of his command, to
measure his commanders and the circumstances by looking leaders and soldiers in the eye and
measuring their spirit. Ridgway said he was “not there to trespass on the sphere of his
61 T.R. Fehrenbach, This Kind of War: The Classic Korean War History (Washington DC:Brassey's, 1963). 185-193.62 Ibid. 251.63 Ibid. 259.
25
subordinates but to drink in, by his senses and all his experience, the actual situation, the human
element above all else.” Ridgway believed strongly that “a basic element in troop leadership is
the responsibility of the commander to be where the crisis of action is going to happen.” 64
Part of this personal assessment process involved gauging the capability of subordinate
commanders to deal with the situation at hand. In Korea, Ridgway visited every corps and
division commander assigned to his army within forty-eight hours of his arrival. He made the
commanders brief him on their own ground. He moved his headquarters forward so that he could
visit his subordinates daily. He sought first of all to restore the army’s fighting spirit, to demand
adherence to high standards of tactical discipline at all levels of command, and to build tactical
cohesion by demanding cooperation among units.
Ridgway turned the Eighth Army around (after giving up Seoul soon after his arrival) and
attacked north to a defensive line that met military requirements and political objectives
(essentially along the 38th parallel). Among his most important contributions, General Ridgway
ensured high standards of tactical discipline. Walking the ground with his commanders, he
discovered that they were often ignorant of the ground in front of them and the enemy in their
area. He ordered the infantry off the roads and onto the high ground, demanded continuous
patrolling, and initiated offensive reconnaissance to restore contact with the enemy.
The decision maker in this vignette is General Matthew B. Ridgway.
The controllable variables include the Eighth Army forces which were under his
command. He could influence the morale of his troops and was credited with restoring a fighting
spirit in the Eighth Army. He controlled the discipline and training of his subordinates and
demanded they regain contact with the enemy. He controlled the operation by approving plans,
and he even relieved his G3, COL Dabney, shortly after taking command when Dabney told
64 From unpublished draft of FM 100-5 Operations, 1998.
26
Ridgway, “Here, General, are our contingency plans for retreat.”65 As commander, Ridgway
also controlled priorities for supplies, air support, and reserves.
The uncontrolled variables, which could affect the outcome of the decision, included
(most importantly) the Chinese Communist Forces (CCF). The size, locations, tactics, and intent
of the enemy forces are paramount to any military commander (particularly because they are only
controllable by the enemy commander). The political situation was not within the commander’s
control. The United Nations Security Council resolution, the United States policy, and potential
involvement by the Soviets would not allow Ridgway total freedom of action. The involvement
of Allies--including Republic of Korea (ROK) forces--were to some extent uncontrollable by
Ridgway. Finally, harsh weather and very difficult terrain were uncontrollable.
The constraints and values of the variables can have significant impact on any operation.
Attacks into Manchuria or against any China mainland targets were forbidden. No Chinese
Nationalist forces, under Chiang Kai-shek, were allowed to join the effort against the CCF. The
relative value of these variables was significant and the Allies had to face the CCF alone on the
peninsula. The availability of Allied airpower and artillery proved an advantage over the mainly
foot-borne infantry of the CCF, but the CCF tactics of hiding by day and attacking by night
helped to negate the value of these means. Logistics are important to both sides in a conflict and
their value can be decisive. Cutting an Army’s lines of communication (those connecting the
base to the force) can force a capitulation.
The possible outcomes produced jointly by the decision and the uncontrolled variables
could span the entire range from total victory to unintentional defeat. If the CCF was able to
continue South in spite the Allied effort (which was the case initially as the CCF pushed past
Seoul) the potential defeat on the Korean peninsula would have significant consequences for the
entire policy of containment. The aggressive use of Allied airpower and artillery could permit
65 Fehrenbach, This Kind of War: The Classic Korean War History. 259.
27
victory through technology without having to rely on the disappointing fighting spirit of the
troops of 1950. This reliance on technology alone proved unsuccessful because of the manner in
which the CCF learned to adapt to long-range indirect fire. Due in part to the political situation, a
stalemate along the entire front could be the best hoped for result.
The Drive to the Rhine at Arnhem of Operation Market-Garden (1944)
After the breakout, exploitation and pursuit to the West wall of the summer of 1944,
Supreme Commander, General Dwight Eisenhower had been searching for both a target and a
suitable opportunity to seize a bridgehead across the Rhine River. Field Marshal Bernard Law
Montgomery (commanding 21st Army Group), had been given tactical use of the First Allied
Airborne Army, under its American commander, Lieutenant General Lewis Brereton.
Eisenhower had to approve all airborne plans but Field Marshal Montgomery was given
permission to explore a possible airborne operation across the Rhine. Eisenhower encouraged
bold and imaginative airborne plans for the First Allied Airborne Army, and several plans were
approved but had to be cancelled due to the rapidly advancing land forces which had already
reached the would-be airborne objectives.66
One plan that showed promise was Operation Comet, which called for Brereton’s
airborne force to seize a Rhine River crossing west of the town of Wesel. Heavy antiaircraft
defenses around Wesel caused Montgomery to look further west on the Holland-German border--
to the bridge at Arnhem. The last minute cancellations of other airborne operations had
significant impact on the ground forces of General Bradley’s 12th Army Group and particularly
General Patton’s Third Army. As aircraft were prepared for airborne operations, they were
unavailable to deliver supplies and haul gasoline to the front along the Saar (north of Alsace-
66 Cornelius Ryan, A Bridge Too Far (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1974). 63-66.
28
Lorraine). Likewise, Eisenhower was concerned about the opening of the port at Antwerp, and
any airborne attack to the Rhine would delay that opening. 67
Any potential airborne operation would have to be conducted in conjunction with an
Army-size ground operation to link-up and secure the bridgehead. General Miles Dempsey,
commander of the British Second Army, expressed his doubts about his Army’s strength to drive
north to Arnhem alone and advocated instead an advance toward Wesel in conjunction with
General Hodges’ First U.S. Army. However, Montgomery boldly pushed his grandiose plan to
seize a succession of river crossings in Holland with the major objective being the Lower Rhine
bridge at Arnhem. The plan called for three and a half divisions (the U.S. 82nd and 101st, the
British 1st Airborne, and the Polish 1st Parachute Brigade). The British Second Army would
then attack over the Rhine and eventually continue east into the Ruhr. Eisenhower approved.
The decision maker in this case is General Eisenhower. Field Marshal Montgomery’s
influence is undisputed and he deserves the credit for planning an operation that General Omar
Bradley called “one of the most imaginative of the war.”68
The controllable variables include the choice of objectives and the direction and distance
of attack. The airborne forces had to secure a series of crossings--including five major bridges.
The forces would be stretched approximately sixty-four miles between the border of Holland and
Arnhem. General Frederick Browning, commander of the British First Airborne, was troubled
that the ground forces would take a few days (seventy-five miles of fighting) to reach the airborne
forces. Browning told Montgomery that he could hold for four days, “but sir, I think we might be
going a bridge too far.”69
67 Ibid. 68-74.68 Ibid. 66.69 Ibid. 89.
29
The other controllable variables include the make-up of the Allied force. The airborne
drop (code name Market) included the three divisions and a brigade, and the ground portion of
the operation (code name Garden) included Dempsey’s Second Army. Knowing that any delay
might jeopardize Market-Garden, Eisenhower assured Montgomery that Patton’s drive to the Saar
would be curbed and the aircraft, fuel, and other resources would be made available at the rate of
a thousand tons per day. September 17, 1944 was set as the day to initiate Market-Garden.
The uncontrolled variables, which could affect the outcome of the decision, must again
include the enemy. The enemy air defenses at Wesel, the first V-2 rockets (believed to be
somewhere in western Holland) had begun to impact in London, and intelligence reports
indicated only a few infantry reserves and low category troops in the Netherlands. A Dutch
intelligence report indicated that some panzer formations had been sent to Holland to refit, but
this report was widely ignored, partially due to the optimism in Montgomery’s 21st Army Group
headquarters. The report was true and by September 15, two panzer divisions from General
Bittrich’s II SS Panzer Corps had settled in Arnhem for refitting and rehabilitation. 70
The constraints and value of the variables include the broad front strategy, which
allocated resources across the front for operations toward the Saar and the Ruhr. The
intelligence report about the SS divisions reorganizing at Arnhem was the most valuable variable.
The fact that it was ignored or misunderstood had dire consequences and threatened both the
airborne and ground missions. This ultimately caused the mission to fail.
The possible outcomes produced jointly by the decision and the uncontrolled variables
include resourcing Montgomery in order to establish a bridgehead across the Rhine, which meant
the halt of Patton’s Third army. An operational failure of the Airborne forces (if shot down near
Wesel) could have jeopardized the future of Airborne operations. This led Montgomery to reject
70 Ibid. 84-89.
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Operation Comet and conceive Operation Market-Garden against Arnhem on a huge scale by
comparison. Even the success of one aspect of the mission (Market--the air part) would not effect
the ground component of Second Army (Garden). The linkup was the critical part of the
operation.
These vignettes will serve as the medium for analysis. The analysis will involve
hypothetical planners with different personality types conducting the MDMP for the problems
represented in the historical vignettes. The planners with different personality types will depict
the perspective of the four Keirsey temperaments (see appendix).
A relationship of personality to the planning process has been suggested. With the
preceding methodology for investigation and illustration, intentional analysis can begin to answer
the research question: Do planners with differing personality types--different ways of perceiving
(sensing and intuition) and judging (thinking and feeling)--conduct the planning process
differently?
ANALYSIS
Leaders execute leadership to influence people while conducting the operations process
to improve their organization. Even leaders who master the domains of the leadership famework
exhibit differences in attitude, cognition, and behavior. These differences result from
manifestations of personality types. “Our understanding of leadership is incomplete because of
ambiguity, inconsistency, and paradox.”71 This is because much of the study of leaders focuses
on traits without understanding (or acknowledging) the underlying processes that generate these
traits.
71 Robert L. Taylor and William E. Rosenbach, eds. Military Leadership: In Pursuit of Excellence(Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1996). 2.
31
This analysis is of underlying processes, which are differentiated by preferences that
animate personality type. The methodology described two historical vignettes of leaders facing
an operational problem. These leaders (decision makers) came as close as any to mastering the
domains of the leadership framework and illustrated the traits approximating the “ideal leader”.
The appendix gives form to the four Keirsey temperaments, which represent only a subset of
Myers’ sixteen personality types based on Jung’s theory.
Although the current doctrine describes the MDMP as a sequential process, emerging
doctrine seeks to capitalize on information technology to facilitate parallel planning between
headquarters, and it seeks to make planning more collaborative by working in shared electronic
workspace--to be shared on the tactical internet. This will make the seven steps (in which the
completion of one step leads to the beginning of the next step) into seven actions to be conducted
more simultaneously. These multiple simultaneous actions will be permeable as greater clarity
leads to refinement of other ongoing actions. The goal of this anticipatory decision making is to
complete the process faster and with broader understanding among all participants (including
anyone with access to the shared workspace).72
The analysis will compare, contrast, and distinguish the four temperaments of personality
type by using the Army’s military planning process (MDMP) in the historical problems cited in
the methodology above. The operational problem identified in each of the vignettes will be
addressed from the perspective of a planner with preferences for the functions represented by the
temperaments. The analysis is not scientific but will serve to compare and contrast the
personality influence when using the same planning process--MDMP. It will also serve to
distinguish differences in perception and judgment processes which spring from the archetypes of
72 From draft Chapter 5 to FM 101-5, 2000.
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personality. “Archetypes are active living dispositions, ideas in the Platonic sense, that perform
and continually influence our thought and feelings and actions.”73
Since military planning is a cognitive (conceptual) process conducted as a group in battle
staffs made up of people with individual personality types, the analysis does not neglect
interpersonal skills. Personality type effects both the conceptual and interpersonal behaviors of
military planners. The temperaments describe differences in perception and judgment and these
are not limited to ideas and facts. They also include perceptions of, and judgements about, other
people in a group and people in general. To describe the medium for illustrative analysis a brief
understanding of the MDMP is warranted.
Figure 2. The Military Decision Making Process (MDMP)74
73 C.G. Jung, “Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious,” in The Basic Writings of C.G. Jung,ed. Violet de Laszlo (New York: Random House, 1959). 288.74 Headquarters, FM 101-5. 5-2.
33
The MDMP has seven steps: (Figure 2). (1) Receipt of Missions, (2) Mission Analysis
(3) Course of Action Development, (4) Course of Action Analysis (War Game), (5) Course of
Action Comparison, (6) Course of Action Approval, and (7) Orders Preparation.
The United Nations counteroffensive on the Korean peninsula (1951)
From the “SJ” Temperament Perspective
In the first step of the MDMP (receipt of mission) the new mission is either issued by a
higher headquarters or derived from ongoing operations. The SJ planner asks the question
“WHAT?” and prefers to be told what to do in concrete terms. Upon assuming command,
General Ridgway asked General MacArthur, “if I get over there and find the situation warrants it,
do I have your permission to attack?”75 In Korea 1951, the Intelligence Preparation of the
Battlefield (IPB) consisted of a “large goose egg on the map in which the figure 174,000 was
inscribed.”76 This is completely unacceptable to the SJ for they thrive on detailed procedures that
yield detailed results--not approximations in the aggregate. The tasks (specified, implied and
essential) derive from the situation and the SJ would employ systematic analysis to determine
where there are gaps in capability (such as in the elements of combat power: maneuver,
firepower, protection, leadership and information).77 They would immediately schedule activities
to bring order (reconnaissance, increased discipline, and commander visits to the front).
The constraints, facts, and assumptions carry much weight for SJs because they establish
realities and bound behavior. The prohibitions against attack outside the peninsula, and political
satisfaction with reestablishing a front along the thirty-eighth parallel helped to define what the
force “should do.” Risk assessment and determining Commander’s Critical Information
75 Fehrenbach, This Kind of War: The Classic Korean War History. 300.76 Ibid. 300.77 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 4-3.
34
Requirements (CCIR) further define the operational environment so the SJ can schedule order.
Initial reconnaissance and planning use of available time are mainstays of the SJ planner. They
can determine what concrete information requirements drive the operation and they naturally plan
and schedule everything in their daily lives.
Course of action (COA) development (a deliberate attempt to design unpredictable
COAs--difficult for the enemy to deduce) can prove more difficult for the SJ planner. They are
comfortable analyzing relative combat power where science provides concrete formulas for
tangible data (troop strength and equipment). Quantifying the intangibles (leadership, morale,
teamwork) requires procedures to yield satisfactory results. Generating options for COA
development requires SJs to use their undeveloped process of intuition. They can easily generate
options based on their physiological senses, but these are often predictable (and easily deduced by
the enemy). The same applies to developing a scheme of maneuver. SJs work well in established
procedures for assigning task and purpose to elements in a physical battlefield organization (deep,
close, rear, reserves, and security; designating a main effort and priorities for support).78 Current
operations doctrine redefines the battlefield organization as “actions in time and space to
accomplish a mission”--decisive operations, shaping operations, and sustaining operations.79
These conceptual operations do not lend themselves to physical analysis in which the SJs excel.
The extent to which COA analysis (wargaming) and COA comparison conform to a
process to give tangible results, determines the level of SJ “buy-in.” They are well suited to
closely supervising the process and inspecting all products thoroughly. They will ensure all
legitimate needs of the process (orderly conduct, necessary participation, note-taking, and
preparation of products on schedule) are met promptly. They will also be superior in mechanical
78 Department of the Army Headquarters, Field Manual (FM) 100-5. Operations (WashingtonD.C.: Government Printing Office, 1993). 6-13.79 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 4-22.
35
procedures for calculating effects, capturing data, and preparing media for presentation (COA
approval) and dissemination (orders production).
From the “NF” Temperament Perspective
Mission analysis for the NFs will focus beyond the words of the higher headquarters or
that which is readily apparent in the situation. They perceive the data that is obvious and look
beyond that data for underlying meaning in the pursuit of harmony. NFs would understand the
new restrictions on Eighth Army--“Fight the war, but don’t get anyone killed. Such orders were
never issued--but they were clearly understood.”80 The NF planner asks the question, “WHO?”
which other temperaments assert has little bearing on planning military operations. However, full
spectrum operations include four types of military action--offense, defense, stability and support--
in joint, multinational, and interagency operations.81 The nature of the mission dictates the
proportion and relationship of the types of military action and people are involved across the
spectrum. In the vignette, the NF planner would concern himself with the battlefield effects on
the soldiers and leaders of the Eighth Army. Likewise, evaluation of the threat would be
extended to Lin Piao and the other CCF commanders. Determining their intent and potential for
continued operations would consume the NF. In terms of tasks, the NFs trust their intuitive
feelings unquestionably and they are valuable in deriving implied tasks necessary to preserve the
force (deception operations and force protection). In the review of available assets, the
intangibles would be far more important than the numbers and category analysis. Their capacity
for empathy would be valuable in reviewing morale and “health” of the command and
subordinates.
80 Fehrenbach, This Kind of War: The Classic Korean War History. 366.81 Headquarters, FM 3-0. 1-15.
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Determining constraints, facts and assumptions would again reveal the NF propensity for
relationships. Internally to the staff, the NF planner would work to personally facilitate a
harmonious working environment to give meaning and wholeness to people’s lives. The NF
preference for the future and the pathway makes them a creative, intuitive asset for COA
development. Relative combat power analysis would not discount leadership as the major
element and people would be their forte. Their intuitive nature allows them to be creative and
their ability to generate unpredictable options (they aspire to be profound) benefits the MDMP.
They could also provide valuable input in wargaming and COA comparison by empathetically
identifying with the soldiers and leaders involved in the operation.
The Drive to the Rhine at Arnhem of Operation Market-Garden (1944)
From the “SP” Temperament Perspective
The whole idea of planning is anathema to SPs. Having the freedom to act
spontaneously, whenever and wherever the opportunity arises, is very important to SPs. But they
also like to be where the action is, and any time in the operations process, there are actions in
planning. Receipt of a mission to conduct an airborne drop behind enemy lines is only the
beginning of possibilities for the SP. The question they ask is “WHEN?” and the answer they
seek is “now.” The Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield (IPB) is a bottomless pit of sensing
perceptions and information, which fascinates the SP planner. They are not predisposed to
concern themselves with decisions about battlefield effects and the threat evaluation, but the data
itself is enthralling. SPs only secondarily judge the value of information, so the air defenses and
ground forces around Wesel had the same utilitarian value as the reports of refitting divisions in
Holland. SPs find the combinations of tasks, constraints, facts, and assumptions restricting their
freedom. In conducting risk assessment, they respect themselves for being daring and feel
confident in their ability to be adaptable. SPs project these valuations onto others and do not
37
readily comprehend caution (extreme force protection) and scripted operations with anything
more than an ultimate objective. They tend to be optimistic about the future since they will adapt
to the circumstances when they arrive at that point in time.
For COA development, SPs are masters at generating alternatives. They do not have the
powerful intuition of other types, but they see the world as it is and are open to all the possibilities
it presents. In fact, it is necessary to push closure with SPs or they may continue in
“brainstorming heaven” and expend valuable time. The SP planner for the Arnhem operation
would have recommended every city with a bridge over the Rhine, until a decision was finally
made (likely by someone other than the SP).
Wargaming and COA comparison can be crucial in order to optimize (or satisfice) the
recommended COA. The decision to proceed to these steps will not satisfy the SP that the
alternatives have been exhausted--and they may continue to recommend changes to task
organization (number of airborne units in Market, and size of the Garden force), scheme of
maneuver (selecting other bridges and objectives), and, most important to the SP, moving D-Day
from September 17 (in order to initiate the action and then take it as it comes). For the final step,
orders production, SPs do not enjoy exacting structure and schedules (which the SJ’s live for).
SPs will find completing the process boring and prefer to move on to more excitement and action.
From the “NT” Temperament Perspective
The NT planner is the conceptualizer for whom mission receipt begins an exciting
learning adventure. In seeking a bridgehead across the Rhine, and having a strong desire to use
the airborne forces (to learn what they were capable of), General Eisenhower opened the
floodgates of learning for the NT planner. The question the NTs ask is “WHY?”--trusting in
reason to derive an answer. The NTs are never satisfied with face value and seek to understand
the underlying architecture and systems that make ideas into reality. They would agree with
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Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, “there can be no empirical knowledge that is not already caught
and limited by the a priori structure of cognition.”82 The facts (battlefield effects and threat
evaluation) are important, but beyond the facts lie the answers.
In reviewing available assets, NTs are tough-minded in figuring out what sort of
technology (airborne forces, joint operations) might be useful to solve a given problem. The
obvious solution (attack west toward Wesel on the way to the Ruhr) is boring since it lacks
learning value. But an innovative, back door approach through Holland (at Arnhem) provides
ample opportunity to learn (since no such large-scale operation had yet been attempted). The
tasks, constraints, facts, and assumptions of mission analysis appear to NTs as the edges of the
envelope (on which one must push to learn what happens).
Determining CCIR, which include Priority Intelligence Requirements (PIR), Essential
Elements of Friendly Information (EEFI), and Friendly Force Information Requirements (FFIR)83
without discipline can result in an exhaustive list of information requirements as NTs seek to
learn why everything happens. The commander’s intent for an NT will likely be abstract,
impersonal, and utilitarian, based on the assumption that their conceptualization is universal.
COA development, analysis, and comparison can be ends in themselves for the NT, since
learning is possible simply by executing the steps. Ideas take form and minor changes can result
in entirely new learning. The NT planners differ in generating options (based on which is their
dominant function) but whether they are directive (judging NTJ) or open-ended (perceptive NTP)
learning drives all NTs. The assignment of task and purpose to subordinate units ensures internal
consistency in any plan. As NTs address why, they ensure that mass, space, and time all focus on
a single aim (or purpose). Orders preparation for NTs could result in two extremes without
discipline in the process. They will either fill page after page with philosophical, conceptual
82 Jaffé, The Myth of Meaning. 28.83 Headquarters, FM 101-5. 5-8.
39
abstractions (which motivate them) or assume the same competence for mental ideas in all people
and omit them as too obvious. As in most things, moderation is appropriate.
CONCLUSIONS
“The Army is a learning organization: we have learned to succeed across the full range
of conflict and instability that may require military organizations and capabilities.”84 As a
learning organization, Peter Senge writes that there are five learning disciplines: (1) personal
mastery, (2) mental models, (3) building shared vision, (4) team learning, and (5) systems
thinking. 85 The fifth discipline, systems thinking, is the highly conceptual framework which
brings together the other four. Interesting to note, that all five disciplines fully describe the NT
temperament of personality type (learning, conceptualizers, mental ideas, systems, and
independents pushing teamwork).
“The reason the Army organization is ‘unique’ is based on the fact that it does not fit
entirely into either the classic technical organization or social (human) organization model.”86
Though dominated by people with a preference for publicly using their judging (directive)
function (represented by the last letter J), the Army is by no means a homogenous organization
and all sixteen types can be found in the military--at all levels from privates to sergeants major,
and from lieutenants to general officers.
Though Jung’s original theory of psychological types was cumbersome and somewhat
incomplete, the subsequent work in the field of personality type has born fruit for practical
application. Amateur understanding is all that is required to understand the implications of
84 Department of the Army Headquarters, Field Manual (FM) 100-1. The Army (WashingtonD.C.: Government Printing Office, 1994). i.85 Peter M. Senge, The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, 1 ed.(New York: Currency Doubleday, 1990). 12, 69.86 US Army War College Headquarters, How the Army Runs: A Senior Leader ReferenceHandbook 1999-2000 (Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania: US Army War College, 1999). 3-1.
40
personality type. “Man possesses a consciousness that not only perceives and reacts to what it
experiences, but is aware of perceiving and understands what it is experiencing.”87 Other theories
have received more attention, but reveal themselves as subsets of Myers’ and Keirsey’s work.
Ivan Pavlov saw behavior as nothing more than mechanical responses to environmental
stimulation (it worked for dogs). Sigmund Freud claimed that man is driven by instinctual lust,
and any higher motives were just disguised versions of that instinct (which may be true for some
people). Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (only the self-actualized can forego the worries
of sustenance, safety, social, and self-esteem needs) was an NF approach to behavior. These
popular theorists could not explain all the temperaments of personality type.88
The learning that results from the intellectual movement from appreciation through
knowledge to understanding is principally valuable in application. 89 Understanding the influence
of personality type on behavior and how it affects the planning process enables leaders to act.
They can use this understanding to capitalize on strengths, develop weaknesses, and mitigate
misunderstanding among the unaware. Increased communication (dialog) remains the goal.
“Any complex activity, if it is to be carried on with any degree of virtuosity, calls for
appropriate gifts of intellect and temperament. . . .[these] refer to a very highly developed mental
aptitude for a particular occupation.”90 Appropriate gifts indicates situational importance. Just as
the analysis pointed out, a combination of personality types produces the strongest result.
The NT conceptualizes and communicates the vision, the SP generates the alternatives
for unconventional strategy, the SJ communicates high expectations, order, and confidence, the
NF shows individual concern, and all are willing to show self-sacrifice. The successful leader
must be able to call upon their knowledge of the staff (and themselves) appropriate to the
87 Jaffé, The Myth of Meaning. 138.88 Keirsey, Please Understand Me II. 20-21.89 Schneider, "Theoretical Paper No. 3: The Theory of Operational Art," 2.90 Clausewitz, On War. 100.
41
requirement. “By knowledge, I do not mean a vast erudition; it is not the question to know a
great deal but to know well; to know especially what relates to the mission appointed us.”91
“Knowledge-based operations will accelerate operating tempos and decision making rate
in staffs. Success in the stressful environment will require a special kind of leader, one who is
technically capable in the tasks of digital decision making, but who retains the reliance on, and
understanding of, how to maximize the unit’s human potential.”92 Not only can a commander or
chief of staff better use their staff, but they may better understand those whom they cannot
control--the enemy. “War is the collision of two living forces.”93 The influences of personality
on behavior will effect the enemy forces as well. Appreciating the indicators of personality type,
then understanding the influence of the archetypal predisposition of the enemy commander is
powerful information.
In order to accomplish on-the-spot decision making represented by the German concept
of Aufstragtaktik (Mission Command) leaders need a common framework and mutual
understanding of the visualization and intent. This understanding is easier among leaders who
have personality type in common (or at least some of the combinations of preferences for attitude,
function, and behavior). Many people are attracted to the military as a profession because it
appeals to one of more of their preferences. However, the army is a broad profession and it’s
attraction is in the eye of the beholder. All sixteen types can be found in the army, so each of
them found something attractive in the people, the organization, the work, the institution, or its
possibilities.
Leaders, and particularly commanders and chiefs of staff, can and should incorporate
their understanding of individual personality type into the entire operations process--particularly
91 Antoine Henri Jomini, The Art of War (Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1862). iv.92 Montgomery C. Meigs and Edward J. Fitzgerald III, "University after Next," Military Review78, no. 2 (1998). 43.93 Clausewitz, On War. 77.
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planning. By doing so, they can (1) allow variations of perspective to meet individual needs, (2)
match individual potential with requirements, (3) resolve conflicts and problems of
understanding, (4) reduce stress, (5) achieve time deadlines and milestones, (6) develop capacity
in non-preference behaviors (during low stress time), (7) develop compensating behaviors, (8)
enable decision making with little information, (9) evaluate decisions as information-intensive or
information-sensitive, and (10) strike a balance of effectiveness versus efficiency by seeking
appropriate exactness or suitable precision. 94
The commander is the central figure in military decision making and based on the
commander’s personality, the information provided and the manner in which it is communicated
must suit the commander’s needs. The operations process places battle command at the center of
all the other processes and as leaders execute planning doctrine, they must view the process as
less mechanical and more human interactive. “Doctrine must pay more than lip service to
battlefield morale, both in human and organizational terms. . . . The segregation of tactics and
leadership in our training publications is symptomatic of how deeply we neglect the human factor
in war.”95
The theories about personality type (psychological types and temperament) propose
explanations of the phenomena that make up individual personalities. These theories and
associated measurement indicators (Keirsey Temperaments and the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator)
provide information to individuals to serve essentially two purposes. First, individuals aware of
their own personality type can conduct self-management--that is they can recognize and
understand their psychological preferences that influence their attitudes, cognitive functions, and
behavior. Second, appreciation and understanding of others’ preferences can allow the
94 Otto and Janet M. Thuesen Kroeger, Type Talk at Work (New York: Delacorte Press, 1992).11-14 and Isabel Briggs Myers, Type and Teamwork (Gainseville , Florida: Center forApplications of Psychological Type, Inc., 1974). 2-4.95 Eden, "Leadership on Future Fields: Remembering the Human Factors in War,". 35.
43
assignment of tasks in which people can work in their preference (where their abilities are
strongest and most developed). In both cases, understanding personality type and associated
preferences (concerning attitude, cognitive function, and behavior) can elicit compensating
behavior and development of weaker, non-developed preferences.
“At the top levels of the Department of Defense in particular, fascination with
technology, finances, and geopolitics continue to relegate human issues--except for a few pet
social projects--to the back bench. In fact, any RMA [Revolution in Military Affairs] will sooner
or later come to depend more on the sustainment of fighting spirit than on the utilization of
cyberspace.”96 The degree to which the military is successful in preparing leaders today for the
challenges of the future, could make the difference between timely victory and stability,
protracted warfare and misery, and potential, unthinkable defeat.
96 Walter F. Jr. Ulmer, “Leaders, Managers, and Command Climate,” in Military Leadership: InPursuit of Excellence, ed. Robert L. Taylor and William E. Rosenbach (Boulder, Colorado:Westview Press, 1996). 199.
44
APPENDIX -- The Keirsey Temperaments
The “SJ” Temperament - The Guardians
This is the “Security Seeking Personality”--trusting in legitimacy and hungering for
membership. The question they ask is “WHAT?” The SJs thrive on procedures and their
observations are principally so they can schedule their own and others’ activities so that needs are
met and conduct is kept within bounds. They are the dependability people--the backbone of any
organization. They tend to be indifferent about the present, pessimistic about the future, and
skeptical about the past. Having the opportunity to act “within the chain-of-command” is very
important to SJs. They are concrete in communicating, cooperative in implementing goals, and
can become highly skilled in rule-bound endeavors, such as logistics and commerce. For SJs,
everything should be in its proper place, everyone should be doing what they are supposed to, and
everybody should be getting what they deserve. Every action should be closely supervised, all
products thoroughly inspected, all legitimate needs met promptly, and all approved endeavors
carefully underwritten. This group represents forty to forty-five percent of the population.
Supervising and inspecting (thinking SJs) or providing and protecting (feeling SJs) are their most
developed operations.97
The “NF” Temperament - The Idealists
This is the “Identity Seeking Personality”--trusting their intuitive feelings unquestionably
and hungering for deep and meaningful relationships. The question they ask is “WHO?” The NF
byword is relationship. They are friendly to the core in coming up with ways to give meaning
and wholeness to people’s lives. Interpersonal conflict in those around them is painful for NFs,
and something they must deal with in a very personal way. Consequently they care very deeply
97 Keirsey, Please Understand Me II. 93-96 and Kroeger and Thuesen, Type Talk . 56.
45
about keeping morale high in their groups and about nurturing the positive self image of their
loved ones. Their preferred time and place is the future and the pathway. They tend to be naive
about the future and mystical about the past. They are abstract in communicating, cooperative in
implementing goals, and can become highly skilled in diplomatic integration--the idealists. They
often speak interpretively and metaphorically of the abstract world of their imagination. This
group represents only eight to ten percent of the population. Teaching and counseling (judging
NFs) or conferring and tutoring (perceiving NFs) are their most developed operations.98
The “SP” Temperament - The Artisans
This is the “Sensation Seeking Personality”--trusting in spontaneity and hungering for
impact on others. The question they ask is “WHEN?” Their preferred time and place is here and
now. They live for the moment. They tend to be optimistic about the future and cynical about
the past. They are masters at generating alternatives and demonstrate they are “street smart” and
take the day as it comes. Isabel Myers described SPs probing their immediate surroundings in
order to detect and exploit any favorable options that come within their reach. Having the
freedom to act spontaneously, whenever and wherever the opportunity arises, is very important to
SPs. They are concrete in communicating, utilitarian in implementing goals, and can become
highly skilled in tactile crafts (working with their hands)--the artisans. This group represents
thirty-five to forty percent of the population. Promoting and operating (thinking SPs) or
performing and composing (feeling SPs) are their most developed operations.99
98 Keirsey, Please Understand Me II. 120-125 and Kroeger and Thuesen, Type Talk . 53.99 Keirsey, Please Understand Me II. 32-35 and Isabel Briggs Myers and Peter B. Meyers, GiftsDiffering: Understanding Personality Type (Palo Alto, CA: Davies-Black Publishing, 1980). 96-97.
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The “NT” Temperament - The Rationals
This is the “Knowledge Seeking Personality”--trusting in reason and hungering for
achievement. The question they ask is “WHY?” The NTs are the conceptualizers. They are
tough minded in figuring out what sort of technology might be useful to solve a given problem.
They demand of themselves to be persistently and consistently rational in their actions. Learning
drives these people and they will often “push the system” solely for the learning that might result
(regardless of the value of the consequences). Their preferred time and place is the interval and
the intersection. They tend to be pragmatic about the present, skeptical about the future, and
egocentric about the past. The NTs seek technology and systems related work. They are abstract
in communicating, utilitarian in implementing goals, and can become highly skilled in strategic
analysis--the rationals. This group represents only five to seven percent of the population.
Marshalling and planning (judging NTs) or inventing and configuring (perceiving NTs) are their
most developed operations.100
100 Keirsey, Please Understand Me II. 163-168 and Kroeger and Thuesen, Type Talk . 55.
47
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